People are more motivated by fighting a negative societal trend than by hitting financial targets. Framing your company's work as a "resistance" movement—like fighting loneliness in a digital world—creates a powerful, unifying rally cry for your team.
The human brain is wired to enjoy solving challenges. Asking "What puzzles would you like to solve?" sparks passion and ownership. In contrast, asking "What are your goals?" often elicits a feeling of obligation and a list of burdensome tasks, draining the work of its inherent meaning and excitement.
Like Napoleon, founders can attract top talent by giving them a grand mission, branding teams to create a proud identity (e.g., "the men without fear"), and demonstrating they are in the trenches alongside their people. This builds loyalty far beyond compensation.
The most motivated employees ("freedom fighters") offer unparalleled commitment, but only if the company's mission is authentic. Unlike mercenaries (paid) or conscripts (obligated), they demand integrity and will quickly expose any disconnect between the stated mission and reality, making them a high-reward but high-maintenance talent segment.
After burning out, Bumble's founder returned with renewed purpose by reframing the company not as an app, but as a "vehicle to deliver love." This elevated, mission-driven perspective—seeing the company as a means to a greater societal end—can be a powerful tool for leaders to overcome fatigue and reconnect with their work.
With only 12% of product teams finding profit-centric goals rewarding, leaders must reframe work. By connecting business outcomes to the emotional, human progress customers are trying to make, leaders can inspire teams far more effectively than with revenue targets alone.
A compelling narrative isn't just about what you do (external). It requires a personal "why" (emotional) and a steel-manned refutation of the dominant worldview (philosophical). This internal work galvanizes teams and resonates with customers.
Beyond finding a market gap, leaders should ask what unique imprint their company leaves on the world. The most powerful justification for a company's existence is providing an essential contribution that no one else would. This reframes the mission from a business goal to an indispensable purpose.
A powerful way to create a flagship message is to define a "villain." This isn't a competitor, but the root cause of the buyer's problem. For Loom, the villain is "time-sucking meetings." For Cloud Zero, it's "unpredictable cloud billing." This frames your product as the clear solution to a tangible enemy.
Every compelling story needs conflict, which requires an enemy. Companies can define their enemy in one of three ways: direct competitors (e.g., other vodkas), competing approaches (e.g., cycling vs. the tube), or beliefs you stand against (e.g., humans are terrible drivers). This ABC framework (Approaches, Beliefs, Competitors) simplifies narrative creation.
Companies often neglect narrative because the complexity of their work is overwhelming. But defining a philosophical "why" creates powerful symbols. This gives work a sense of ultimate concern, making it feel more meaningful and inspiring to employees and customers.